Bitcoin ETFs see full week of net outflows, record low inflows for BlackRock, Fidelity
Outflows from spot bitcoin ETFs overpowered new capital on each day this past week, with record-low inflows for BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC.Grayscale’s GBTCalso saw record-breaking single-day outflows on Monday, March 18, which may reflect Genesis selling shares.
Over the past week, the ten ETFs saw total outflows of $888 million, led by a day of record-breaking outflows from Grayscale's GBTC on Monday, March 18 according to data from BitMEX Research. The five-day streak of net outflows is the longest seen thus far, besting a four-day streak from January of this year.
The strong outflows were matched by weak inflows. Blackrock's IBIT, which captures almost half the market, saw record-low inflows of $49.3 million on Wednesday, March 20, only for that record to be broken on Friday, when IBIT received only $18.9 million in new capital. Fidelity's FBTC, the third-largest spot bitcoin ETF, also saw record-low inflows this week, with merely $2.9 million on Thursday, March 21.
While the strong outflows correspond with a pullback in bitcoin's price, other factors may explain the large outflows: Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas noted that Grayscale's unusually large outflows may be the result of digital financial firm Genesis's trading.
And while inflows were net negative, trading volumes were still significant, if slightly lower than recent weeks. According to The Block's data dashboard , the cumulative volumes of the spot bitcoin ETFs increased about $22 billion over the past week to reach a total of $164 billion.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin due 2026 bottom as exchange volumes grind lower: Analysis

samczsun: The Key to Crypto Protocol Security Lies in Proactive Re-Auditing
Bug bounty programs are passive measures, while security protection requires proactive advancement.

Millennials with the most cryptocurrency holdings are reaching the peak of divorce, but the law is not yet prepared.
The biggest problem faced by most parties is that they have no idea their spouse holds cryptocurrency.

Using "zero fees" as a gimmick, is Lighter's actual cost 5–10 times higher?
What standard accounts receive from Lighter is not free trading, but rather slower transactions. This delay is turned into a source of profit by faster participants.

